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Functional Plant Biology
  Functional analysis of plants
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β-Glucuronidase activity in seedlings of the parasitic angiosperm Cusctua pentagona: developmental impact of the β-glucuronidase inhibitor saccharic acid 1,4-lactone

Mark A. Schoenbeck A B, Gabriel A. Swanson A and Sydney J. Brommer A

A Biology Department, University of Nebraska at Omaha, Omaha, NE 68182-0040, USA.
B Corresponding author. Email: mschoenbeck@mail.unomaha.edu


Abstract

Endogenous plant β-glucuronidase (β-GUS) activity was detected in germinating seeds, seedlings, stems, flowers and haustoria of the parasitic angiosperm Cuscuta pentagona Engelm. In vitro characterisation of this activity showed it to have an acidic pH optimum, similar to previously characterised plant activities, and a sensitivity to the β-GUS inhibitor saccharic acid 1,4-lactone (SAL). Application of SAL to seeds immediately after chemical scarification resulted in a significant developmental delay and, frequently, in the total arrest of seedling growth. In contrast, application of SAL subsequent to the emergence of the radicle did not produce a significant effect on the development of the seedling. Thus, the distribution of activity and the developmentally contingent potency of SAL in inhibiting growth suggest a role for β-GUS at an early stage of seed germination or seedling growth. Further, the inability of the inhibitor to prevent subsequent shoot elongation suggests that at least some plant growth processes do not require this activity, or that it is required only at minimal levels and is unaffected by the application of SAL.

Keywords: germination, glycosyl hydrolase, seedling development.

Functional Plant Biology 34(9) 811–821    doi:10.1071/FP07134
Submitted: 28 May 2007    Accepted: 18 July 2007    Published: 30 August 2007





   
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